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Minecraftでエンドシティのタワーを自分で建設する

Minecraftでエンドシティのタワーを自分で建設する

Alexandru Maftei
Alexandru Maftei
@ice
Updated
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TL;DR:Minecraftのエンドシティタワーをゼロから設計・建設する方法を学びましょう。このガイドでは、タワーデザインの原理、素材集め、構造技法、そして本物のエンドシティのように見える装飾テクニックをカバーしています。

End Cities are naturally-generated structures in Minecraft's End dimension, but you can build your own towers from scratch using endstone, obsidian, and purpur blocks. The process takes planning and the right materials, but the result is a striking structure that looks incredible in any End-themed build.

Understanding End City Aesthetics

First, let's be clear about what we're actually building here. You've probably seen the actual End Cities if you've spent time in the End (and Minecraft 26.2 makes them easier to navigate than ever). They're tall, geometric, beautiful structures made mostly from purpur blocks and endstone, with obsidian pillars running through them and little walkways connecting everything. When I first tried to replicate one, I made the rookie mistake of thinking I could just stack purpur blocks and call it done.

Turns out, the real End Cities have this very specific aesthetic that involves layering, negative space, and careful placement of obsidian accents. The beauty of building your own tower is that you don't have to replicate the real thing exactly. You can take the core design elements and run with them.

What actually makes an End City tower recognizable? The vertical lines of obsidian. So this gradual taper. One way purpur blocks catch light differently depending on the angle. These are the visual anchors your build needs.

Planning Your Tower Build

Before you place a single block, find your location. If you're working in Survival, head out past the main island and find a relatively flat area of the End. The last thing you want is your tower wedged between terrain that'll make it look cramped (I learned this the hard way on my server). You need sightlines. Most players need space to breathe.

Creative mode obviously makes this easier, but I'd actually recommend doing this in Survival if you can. Gathering the materials forces you to spend more time in the End, which makes you understand the dimension better.

Now for the material list. You'll need:

  • Purpur blocks (a lot of them - this is your primary building block)
  • Endstone (for accents and ground-level base, creates nice contrast)
  • Obsidian (tall pillars give End Cities their distinctive vertical look)
  • Purpur stairs and slabs (for roofing and architectural breaks)
  • Dark oak wood (optional, adds warmth and biological texture)
  • Purpur pillars (creates ribbed effects on walls when oriented vertically)
  • Chains and lanterns (for atmospheric hanging details)

In Survival mode, you're going to need a serious amount of endstone and purpur blocks. Mining obsidian takes forever even with a diamond pickaxe, so don't underestimate how much you need. I usually aim for at least 2-3 full double chests of each major material before I start building anything significant.

Building the Main Structure

Start with your base. Create a rectangular foundation using endstone, about 15x15 blocks, raised about 3 blocks off the ground. So this gives you a clean platform that reads as intentional. From there, your tower should taper slightly as it goes up. Instead of building a perfect cylinder or rectangle, offset your walls inward by one block every few layers. So this creates a gradual cone shape that looks way more interesting than a straight column.

Your core should be a single tall obsidian pillar running up the center of the entire structure. So this gives the eye something to follow and breaks up horizontal layers. Now build your walls in sections, then add variation between them. One section might be mostly solid purpur with obsidian accents every five blocks. The next section up could be more open, with purpur blocks arranged in a lattice pattern with gaps showing the End sky through them.

Use purpur stairs to create diagonal elements. You can angle them to create rooflines that point upward, giving the tower a sense of motion. Slab layers break things up too. A horizontal stripe of purple slabs between solid blocks of purpur creates shadow and depth without adding bulk. Don't overdo it though. Honestly, real End Cities are beautiful because of restraint, not clutter.

Obsidian is what separates a purple tower from a real End City tower. Arrange obsidian blocks in vertical strips along the outside of your main walls. These should run from the ground all the way to the top, offset so they're not perfectly aligned. So this gives the structure an organic, fractured look that matches the alien nature of the dimension.

Your tower needs a proper top. Taper the walls inward more aggressively as you reach the peak, creating a pointed spire effect. The last few blocks should be obsidian, all the way up. Some builders add a flat obsidian platform at the very top. Others prefer a sharp point. Both look incredible.

Adding Details and Atmosphere

Real End Cities have those floating bridges and upper platforms that make them feel multi-layered. Add some walkways at different heights using purpur planks or slabs, connecting your main tower to nearby structures or just extending outward dramatically. Create a flat platform about two-thirds of the way up where players can walk around. Make it slightly wider than the tower itself so people can actually move.

Lighting matters more than you'd think. Real End Cities benefit from the End's ambient purple lighting, but you can enhance it. Place amethyst blocks strategically so light passes through them and creates a purple glow. Glow berries strung along the outside add a biological element to an otherwise geometric structure. Lanterns hanging from chains at various heights give wanderers a sense of navigation and break up the darkness.

Add some decorative details near the base. A small garden of chorus flowers, end rods pointing in various directions, a few froglights embedded in endstone. These small touches transform an impressive tower into an actual location. If you're feeling ambitious, build a smaller secondary structure nearby. Another tower, a connecting bridge, something with purpose.

Consider the interior too. Most builders leave the inside hollow, which is fine. But you could add spiraling staircases, observation decks, or even a small brewing setup at the top. An interior gives visitors a reason to actually enter your tower, not just admire it from afar.

Protection and Customization

In Survival multiplayer, endermen are a problem. They steal blocks. A simple solution is using obsidian or purpur in patterns they can't grab. A tiny water channel around the perimeter fixes most issues without looking ugly. For actual mob defense, consider adding a roofed top section with a small gap for players but not creepers.

The real fun is personalizing your tower. Want a magical theme? Use more amethyst and glow berries. Prefer a more industrial, alien look? Stick with obsidian and endstone. I've seen towers with massive obsidian frameworks that look like they're supporting something vast and invisible. Your tower, your rules.

Having the right skin makes building feel a lot more immersive. Check out our free skin gallery with over 126,000 options to find something that matches your End City aesthetic. Or if you want something completely custom, try our skin creator tool to build exactly what you're envisioning.

Is It Worth Your Time?

Building an End City tower takes time, materials, and patience. On my server, a decent-sized tower took me and a friend about three play sessions. A truly massive one with multiple sections and lots of detail could take significantly longer. But the payoff is huge.

A well-built End City tower is one of those structures that catches every player's eye when they stumble across it. It's instantly recognizable, thematically consistent with the dimension, and genuinely beautiful in a way that pure survival bases often aren't. The End dimension is weird and alien and purple and perfect for structures that match that energy. A tower is one of the easiest ways to make that happen.

About the author
Alexandru Maftei
Alexandru MafteiLead Writer

Lead writer at minecraft.how. Long-time Minecraft player running a small SMP server, testing every build, mod, and seed before writing about it.

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